March Notes from the President’s Corner

We had a lively monthly meeting this past Saturday!

We started out critiquing Susan Bell’s short story, “Autumn Picnic,” and the first two chapters of my work-in-progress, Missed Cue. The feedback we got was encouraging and helpful. And I have to say I am in awe of Susan’s ability to vividly create a setting which becomes a character in and of itself. I can’t wait to read more of her work! At our April meeting, we’ll critique additional chapters of Missed Cue and the first chapter of Linda Rees’s Unwilling Donor.

Next came our business meeting, in which we tentatively decided that we’ll hold our one-day spring retreat from 10am to 4pm on June 5th at General Butler State Park. V-P Carol Preflatish is coordinating. At the meeting, we’ll work on visioning for our chapter—where we want to go from here and how we can get there! We’ll also do some writing, and Carol has suggested the possibility of a speaker as well.

We voted to offer all speakers a $25 gift card to Barnes and Noble or an honorarium to cover gas for out-of-town speakers.

We discussed the national membership requirement for local chapter members and decided to table the issue. I’m going to follow up with the liaison for SinC’s local chapters and see how we can best approach this. Carol and I both spoke up about the benefits we’ve received from being part of the national organization. We appreciate, however, that not everyone wants to join the national organization ($40 a year for active members and $50 a year for professional members) and we want to be welcoming to all and grow our membership. I suggested that we have a Friends of Derby Rotten Scoundrels’ category for those reluctant to join the national organization, but I’m going to research this further before we make a decision.

In addition, there’s a question Elaine brought up about whether chapters have a “honeymoon” period in which potentially interested folks can attend a certain number of meetings before being asked to join both the local chapter and the national organization.

Following our business meeting, we had a fascinating talk by Elaine Munsch on the history of women crime writers.  Elaine took us all the way from Mary Elizabeth Braddon’s The Trail of the Serpent, published in 1861, through the Golden Age of Mysteries in the 1920s and 1930s, and all the way up into the 1970s. She also gave us a handout listing notable titles and reference works about women crime writers.

Next month, our guest speaker is me! Here’s the blurb about my talk on “Writing Realistic Young Adult Fiction: Some Dos and Don’ts”

Have a hankering to pen a young adult novel? The teenage years are rife with drama, conflict, angst, and plenty of humor—all great ingredients for fiction. But keep in mind that the world in which young people are coming of age now is dramatically different from the one we grew up in. And the fiction today’s teens are reading is a far cry from the novels of our youth where characters were almost always white, middle class, and heterosexual, and the biggest problem  was finding a date for prom.

We’ll talk about dos and don’ts for writing realistic fiction for teens, as well as ways to get started on your own young adult novel.

I hope you’ll join us for our April 10th on-line meeting. Our secretary, Susan Bell, will be sending out a Zoom invitation and an agenda for the meeting ahead of time.

Until next month…

Lynn

Notes from the President’s Corner

On Saturday, February 13, fourteen of us met for our second online chapter meeting. While Zoom can never match the pleasures of meeting face-to-face, it was still wonderful to be together.

Highlights included the chance to offer feedback to Elaine Munsch on the opening of her new series centered around Annie, a recurring character in her Dash Hammond series. Talk about a wonderful premise! A celebrated mystery author sets up a demonstration crime scene for a talk he’s giving at Annie’s bookstore, only to end up as a corpse at the scene. Needless to say, we all can’t wait to read more!

Susan Bell followed up with a helpful tutorial on using tracking in Word to comment on one another’s work. Speaking of Susan, her interview on my web site went up on Saturday. Susan has had such an eclectic and interesting career, and I’d love for you to read about it at: https://lynnslaughter.com/2021/02/13/meet-susan-bell/

At our business meeting, we talked about having a one-day retreat in June to address where we want to go as a chapter. V-P Carol Preflatish is taking the leadership in setting this up and is investigating General Butler State Park as a possible meeting place.

Our delightful guest speaker was M.J. Downing, author of Sherlock Holmes, the Case of the Undead Client and The Werewolves of Edinburgh. A third book in the series will come out next year.

Unlike the original series, Mark chose to focus on the point of view of John Watson and to explore his growth as a character. He was particularly interested in showing motivation through dialogue and noted that compared to other Victorian authors, Arthur Conan Doyle’s style was more linear and relied more heavily on dialogue.

Whereas Holmes avoided emotional entanglements, Watson was interested in women, and Mark included a romantic triangle and its attendant suffering as a part of Watson’s growth. “He learns about himself through his adventures,” he explained, “and the consequences to his choices.”
He also discussed his writing process. He uses a whiteboard for plotting and looks at the ending and then plots backwards. But he also takes great joy in making discoveries about characters in the process of his writing.

You can watch his presentation right here on our website and can learn more about Mark and his other writing projects on his personal website. Go to: https://mjdowningsplace.com/

In other news, our former chapter president, Beth Henderson, has an upcoming release on

April 5th of her historical romantic mystery, Until . . ., set in the Idaho mining country in 1863. Congratulations, Beth!

That’s it for now, and I sure hope you’ll join us for our next meeting on Saturday, March 13.

P.S. Both at the meeting and in subsequent emails, we all shared information about upcoming writing conferences. They include:

Sleuth Fest
March 19-21, 2021, online this year, sponsored by Florida chapter of the

Mystery Writers of America
https://sleuthfest.com/

Malice Domestic
April 30- May 2, 2021, Bethesda, Maryland
https://www.malicedomestic.org/

Imaginarium
July 9-11, 2021, Louisville, KY
https://www.entertheimaginarium.com/

Killer Nashville
August 19-22, 2021, Franklin, TN
https://killernashville.com/

Prime Crime
formerly Magna cum Murder, October 22-24, Indianapolis,IN
https://www.facebook.com/groups/308844470155156

Legendary Book Bash
in case anyone in the membership wants to join or attend. The manager is: Michelle Areaux at: michelle@kingstonpublishing.com
When: August 28th, 20201
Where: DoubleTree Suites by Hilton Hotel Lexington
2601 Richmond Road
Lexington, KY 40509
Eventbrite Link:
https://www.eventbrite.com/e/readers-envy-lexington-legendary-book-bash-tickets-64420405166?aff=ebdssbeac
Author Form: https://docs.google.com/forms/d/e/1FAIpQLSdmMbwFvbHbqqVrmiZxZDQ4LZmdK4vRWWsk5blN4D29VI5foQ/viewform